Subsribe
TWO TRAILS,
ONE ADVENTURE
Choose along the way if you are facing one of the two paths without any obligation or constraint.
Subsribe
START29 MAY 2021
The worst thing in life is the temptations that he did not give up.

(Alan Ayckbourn)

Romagna Bike Trail

An adventure without any type of support, on a mountain bike, up and down the hills of Romagna all the way to the Adriatic sea.

STAGE

The Romagna Bike Trail is a one stage trail.
The chronometer starts at the beginning of the route and it only stops at the end.

TIME

The Romagna Bike Trail has no time limits.
You can choose when and where to stop without worrying about the time.

SELF-SUPPORTED

Each participant must face the trail in complete autonomy, without any type of support.

GPS

Each participant must send their GPS track to prove that they have completed the trail.

The places of Romagna Bike Trail

Ravenna

Mausoleum of Theodoric, in Ravenna, is the most well-known funeral construction of the Ostrogoths. It was built around the year 520 by Theodoric the Great as his future tomb, in stone.

The Chalk Vein Park

The “Chalk Vein” Vena del Gesso of Romagna constitutes one of the most important and characteristic geographical formations of the entire Appennine area in Emilia-Romagna.

Brisighella

The hamlet is characterized by three rocky peaks, on which are situated the Manfredi Fortress, the Sanctuary of Monticino and the so-called Clock Tower, rebuilt in the 1800s.

The National Park of Foreste Casentinesi

The National Park of Foreste Casentinesi, was instituted in1993 and is situated in the Tuscan-Romagnolo Appennines, between the provinces of Forlì-Cesena, Arezzo and Florence.

Eremo di Camaldoli

The Hermitage of Camaldoli can be found near the town of the same name, at about 1100 metres above sea level, inside the National Park of Foreste Casentinesi, Mount Falterona and Campigna.

Premilcuore

The Silos-Pastoral Center of the Tosco-Romagna Apennine, located in the upper valley of the Rabbi River, ancient village with ancient Roman origins.

Dante's walk

The Dante’s Way is the route that traces the ancient streets and medieval paths connecting, at the time of the Poet, Romagna and Tuscany, Ravenna and Florence.

St. Vicinio’s Way

Opened in 2008 in memory of the first bishop of Sarsina, San Vicinio’s Way is a journey along the boundary ridge between Tuscany and Romagna and
Montefeltro.

Assisi Way

The Assisi Way is made up of small, centuries-old pilgrimages now united in a great way between Dovadola and Assisi and centred on the figures of the two saints.

Saint Francis’s Walk

Explore the birthplace of the Franciscan Order by faithfully following the way of the founder in 1213.

St. Anthony’s Way

St. Anthony’s Way connects Padua to La Verna and retraces some of the most important places in the life of St. Anthony of Padua.